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Memoirs of a Geisha : A Novel

Memoirs of a Geisha : A Novel

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $10.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent Must Read for All Ethnic Backgrounds
Review: I couldn't turn the pages fast enough. This book shows us that slavery is not just middle passage. Once you read this book no matter what your views of a Geisha girl were be it: Prostitute, Artist or Entertainer, the bottom line is the struggles they go through whether sold into it or born into the life of a Geisha it is a form of slavery. This book truly opened my eyes and I have the utmost respect for the few remaining Geisha that continue to entertain in a standard few can touch. I was amazed at how Arthur actually made you feel each characters sorrows and joys. Excellent book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This Is Probably The Best Book I Have Ever Read!
Review: I have read many books about culture but this tops every one that I have read. I have never known that it was so hard to be a geisha, having to go through all that training, suffering, backstabbing, love, lust, respect and the war. Having to portray a different personality in front of others is a really hard thing to do. This book has made me understand not only the culture of Japan but also the true life of a geisha.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Understanding My Own Culture
Review: As a Japanese woman who lives in NY, I was about to search Sayuri's footsteps. I couldn't believe the story was a fiction, however it taught me my own culture which I never knew or thought about.

As I read along, I could relate myself to Sayuri. Even though I am here in US, I still live with Japanese culture when I have a dinner with Japanese men. We, as women, are still expected to serve drinks to them. To have witty conversation is considerably good not only your daily routine work. Followed by Karaoke is often required after dinner. In 90's, an ordinary girl entertains men. You can see a scene like this anywhere whether if it's in NY or Tokyo. The culture didn't change, but the players.

The book was written so poetic as if Sayuri was really telling her story. Her pain, feelings and emotions were so real, I almost could feel it for myself. It also well described how seniors petrify juniors such as Hatsumomo's meanness towards Sayuri. Every details w! as so familiar to me.

The book definitely gave me an inspiration and confirm my own identity. I still cannot get over the fact that Sayuri was a fictional figure, but I am glad the book was written and widely read to many Americans and/or Westerners to have better understanding of Geisha and Japan.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wonderfully unique
Review: This was a wonderfully unique reading that kept me on edge most of the time. The subject matter as well as the history left me hungry for more. Already head first into Eastern literature this was certainly a tantilizing taste (even if it did come from a Westerner). What does this say to us feminists? How accurate is this, I ask myself?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An interesting look at the lifestyle and culture of a Geisha
Review: I enjoyed this book after I got into it, but it started kind of slow. For anyone interested in how a Geisha lived in Japan during the 30's and 40's, this book really gives you the flavor of that lifestyle. The ending was quite abrupt and unexpected, but overall a book worth reading. Hard to believe it was written by an American male.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Vivid, beautiful, and captivating
Review: I couldn't put the book down and stayed up all night to finish this masterpiece. I felt terribly sad at the end at the thought that Nitta Sayuri is a fictional character. Golden portrayed her life so vividly that it's hard for me to imagine her stories and experiences are not true. The only complaint that I have is that the ending seemed a bit rushed and abrupt. Perhaps I just didn't want the story to end.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazing and Informative
Review: Not only is this book a fabulous story, it is full of educational information. As most westerners, I'm sure, do, I always thought a Geisha was a prostitute. This book cleared that up fast! It also taught a lot of Japanese customs and history. The story itself was captivating and I didn't want it to end. The only loose end that I wish they had tied up, was with regards to her sister.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Review
Review: I truly enjoyed this book and watching the road Sayuri's life took. It was beautifully written and did wrap me up completely in the world of Gion. It was very contradictory of Golden, however, to so eloquently talk about fate and the hard life of a geisha and then give us such a slapped-on... ending. Sayuri learns as she grows up that the life of a geisha is to be full of disappointments and few choices of her own...Golden needn't have added such a glamorous ending, Hollywood will do it for him when the movie comes out!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hypnotic and sweeping, it will captivate you
Review: A lovely, complex, and engaging tale which was never dense or dull and often extremely moving. Though Golden's specialty is the small details in each scene, they come together to tell a story whose momentum is powerful; I found this hard to put down!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A MASTERPIECE
Review: I saw the book in an ad and knew at once I had to get it. I finally did and read half the book in one day. The Asian culture is a subject that interests me and Memoirs of a Geisha is a perfect example. I was caught up in Sayuri's life, and I kept wanting to turn the pages just to see how it would unravel. I think that Arthur Golden has accomplished a great feat in creating this masterpiece...a portrait of a geisha.


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